Utility of 3D modelling of the patient's living environment as perceived by occupational therapists

Author:

Guay Manon12ORCID,Auger Claudine34ORCID,Séguin‐Tremblay Noémie2ORCID,Michaud François56ORCID,Labbé Mathieu56ORCID,Chevalier Natalie2ORCID,Plante Michelle7,Polgar Janice8

Affiliation:

1. School of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Université de Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Quebec Canada

2. Research Center on Aging Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux de l'Estrie – Centre hospitalier universitaire de Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Quebec Canada

3. Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Rehabilitation of Greater Montreal Montreal Quebec Canada

4. School of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine Université de Montréal Montreal Quebec Canada

5. Interdisciplinary Institute for Technological Innovation (3IT) Sherbrooke Quebec Canada

6. Engineering Faculty Université de Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Quebec Canada

7. Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux de l'Ouest‐de‐l'Île Montreal Quebec Canada

8. School of Occupational Therapy Western University London Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionVisiting a patient's living environment is important for occupational therapists, albeit costly and time consuming. MapIt is a mobile app producing a 3D representation of a home with the possibility of taking measurements. The purpose of this study was to explore the utility of a 3D representation of a patient's home for the clinical practice of occupational therapists.MethodsCase study in which the unit of analysis was the utility of MapIt as defined by ISO 9241‐11:2018 and as perceived by occupational therapists in four different occupational therapy clinical settings (Canada). Onsite observations with 10 occupational therapists (and their patients) were triangulated with data from interviews, diaries, and logbooks. Inductive thematic condensation led to emerging conclusions for each clinical setting, fuelling the next case data collection and analysis. Inter‐case analysis was corroborated by additional occupational therapists, through crowdsourcing and expert review.ResultsOccupational therapists' clinical reasoning was supported by the MapIt app, enhancing and streamlining their work and inducing adjustments to treatment plans. Occupational therapists saw and measured the patient's environment remotely, to better match person‐environment‐occupation and promote occupational engagement. MapIt's 3D representations were judged useful to communicate between occupational therapists and stakeholders, to educate, allow continuity, optimise resources, minimise the patient's time on a waitlist for homecare, and save time for everyone.DiscussionMapIt allowed occupational therapists who performed home visits to bring a little of the patients' home to their office, whereas occupational therapists without access to the home could see it and take measurements. MapIt's utility was confirmed for practice in clinical settings and for better continuity of care between settings.ConclusionMapIt makes it possible for occupational therapists to ‘walk around’ the patient's home remotely, but the possibility of measuring environmental elements is a 3D model's true added value over currently used photos or short videos.

Funder

AGE-WELL

Faculté de médecine et des sciences de la santé, Université de Sherbrooke

Publisher

Wiley

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